Water travels south from the North Pole primarily due to the Earth's rotation and the force of gravity. As water flows from higher elevations, such as glaciers and ice caps, it moves toward lower elevations, which often leads it to flow southward. Additionally, ocean currents driven by wind patterns and the Coriolis effect also influence the movement of water, contributing to the southward flow from polar regions.
North of course! There is no other way to travel.
The North Pole and the South Pole are two places on Earth where one cannot specifically travel east or west, as all directions point south from the North Pole and north from the South Pole.
You can only travel south from the North Pole.
The North Pole is at 90 North & the South Pole is at 90 South.
If you were standing exactly at the North Pole, the only possible direction you would be able to travel would be south.
If you are standing precisely at the South pole, you can only travel north.
North of course! There is no other way to travel.
You travel south.
The North Pole and the South Pole are two places on Earth where one cannot specifically travel east or west, as all directions point south from the North Pole and north from the South Pole.
They fly.
Because the North Pole is farthest north on the Earth
The North Pole is located at the northern most tip of the Earth. The only direction in which you can travel from the North Pole is south.
north pole to south pole and back
The South Pole has land under it, the North Pole only has water.
Magnetic field lines always travel from the north pole to the south pole outside the magnet, and from the south pole to the north pole inside the magnet.
At the exact North pole, all directions would be South!
Only south!